A PARTNERSHIP FOR ENTREPRENEURIAL LITERACY AND LOCAL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENTArts, Culture & Libraries Committee | January 19, 2015
WHAT IS THE DALLAS B.R.A.I.N.?
T H E A C R O N Y MB u s i n e s s Re s o u rc e A n d I n fo r m at i on N e t w or k
T H E O B J E C T I V EPosition Dallas as a leading small business and entrepreneurship city
T H E B A C K G R O U N DThe result of a collaboration between Dallas Public Library
and Office of Economic Development
T H E I M PA C TFaster access to startup and expansion resources
More transparent city services and easier regulatory compliance
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WHAT ARE SMALL BUSINESSES?
90%of small businesses
have fewer than
5 employees
79%
11%
9%
1%
MICROOwner plus 1-4 employees
SECOND STAGE5-99 employees
SOLOOwner no employees
MACROOver 100 employees
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Source: OED analysis of U.S. Census Bureau Data.
WHY SMALL BUSINESSES ARE IMPORTANT
Asset building opportunities
Training ground for new workers
Diversity and flexibility for large buyers
Neighborhood retail, services and character
Big impact from local hiring and spending
1 IN 6 SELF-EMPLOYED
EMPLOY 30% OF WORKERS
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Source: OED analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. PEW Research Center (2015). International Economic Development Council (2009)
SMALL BUSINESSES NEED THE B.R.A.I.N.
TRADITIONAL INCENTIVES HAVE LIMITATIONSHigh transaction cost
Large qualifying investmentIncome or geographic restrictions
CITY’S BEST ROLE AND OPPORTUNITIESSupport underserved microbusinesses
Promote maximum use of existing resourcesMake City more transparent
Convene and encourage collaboration
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See Appendix A for Partner Network.
B.R.A.I.N. SUPPORTS DEPARTMENT MISSIONS
DALLAS PUBLIC LIBRARYFoster self-learning and economic vitality of the community
Literacy and learningConnecting people to resources
OFFICE OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTStrategic Engagement framework:
Business friendlyEconomically balanced
Sustainable neighborhoods
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DPL+OED PARTNERSHIP
OFFICE OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTOnline platform (rebranded SourceLinkDallas)
Network of mentoring, training and funding partnersBusiness development, marketing and research expertise
DALLAS PUBLIC LIBRARY28 locations with training and event spaces
Trusted presence in the communityOne-on-one customer service experience
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DPL/OED PARTNERSHIP Implementation
Brand and align departments
Reposition existing assets
Create new processes to realize
partnership potential
STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3
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See Appendix B for organization and funding.
IMPLEMENTATION STEP 1: Brand and Align Departments
PURPOSEIndividual potential and community improvement through entrepreneurship.
MISSIONEntrepreneurship literacy and local business development.
CLIENT PROMISEHelp identify the best next step in entrepreneurship and recommend needed
resources to take that step.
PARTNER PROMISEUnderstand your mission, programs and ideal client to promote you and make value-
added referrals and connections.
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IMPLEMENTATION STEP 2: Reposition Existing Assets
Co-locate staffJoint work-plan and
calendar
Introduce partnersEstablish the venue
Facilitate partner events
Mobile-responsiveWorkshop / Events
CalendarChecklists
Community blogResource matching
DPL + OED Staff WebsiteSammons Business Center
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See Appendix C for example events.
IMPLEMENTATION STEP 3: Creating New Processes
IN-PERSON INTAKE, ASSESSMENT AND REFERRALAction coaching | Articulate next step | Resource
referral | Follow up
INBOUND MARKETING AND SOCIAL STRATEGYSocial media and e-newsletter | Community blog |
National partners
NEIGHBORHOOD BRANCH ENGAGEMENTCitywide platform | Discovery and outreach | Tailored
resources
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NEW PROCESSES: Neighborhood Branch Engagement
Learn needs and opportunities
PILOT PROGRAMS: Highland Hills, Prairie Creek, Audelia Road
Library staff training (system-wide) beginning January
Locate and recruit custom resources
Run programs, ongoing adjustment
STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3
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DELIVERING FOR NEIGHBORHOOD PLUS
IN YEAR ONE
Well-positioned branches | Distinct communities | Expandable Infrastructure
Financial literacyWorkforce Development
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APPENDIX A: ORGANIZATION AND FUNDING
OED Staff Assigned Full TimeBusiness Ecosystem Manager | Economic Development Analyst
DPL Staff Providing Part-Time SupportBusiness and Technology Manager | Library Associates (2) | Periodic
Branch Staff Support
OED operational funds from Public/Private Partnership FundMarketing funding from Citi Community Development grant
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APPENDIX B: PARTNER NETWORK
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• A Billion Entrepreneurs• Accion Texas• BCL of Texas• Brookhaven College• Business Assistance Center 1 (BAC 1)• Business Assistance Center 2 (BAC 2)• Business Assistance Center 3 (BAC 3)• Business Assistance Center 4 (BAC 4)• Business Assistance Center 5 (BAC 5)• Business Assistance Center 6 (BAC 6)• Business Assistance Center 7 (BAC 7)• Business Assistance Center 8 (BAC 8)• Business Development & Procurement Services• Business Finishing School• Caruth Institute for Entrepreneurship (SMU)• Cedar Valley College• Certified Development Corp of the SW• Collin Small Business Development Center• Dallas Black Chamber of Commerce• Dallas Business Finance Corporation• Dallas Metropolitan Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• Dallas Public Library• Dallas SCORE• Dallas/Fort Worth Minority Supplier Development Council
• Eastfield College Office of Continuing Ed. and Workforce Development• El Centro College Corporate Solutions• Entrepreneurs For North Texas• Executives in Action• Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas• Grayson SBDC• Greater Dallas Asian American Chamber of Commerce• Greater Dallas Hispanic Chamber of Commerce• Greater Dallas Indo American Chamber of Commerce• Greater Dallas Korean American Chamber of Commerce• Greater East Dallas Chamber of Commerce• Innercity Community Development Corporation (ICDC)• International SBDC• Kilgore Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• MBDA Center Dallas• McLennan Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• Mountain View College Economic and Workforce Development• Navarro Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• North Central Texas Small Business Development Center• North Dallas Chamber of Commerce• Northeast Texas Small Business Development Center• Oak Cliff Chamber of Commerce• Paris Small Business Development Center
APPENDIX B: PARTNER NETWORK (Continued)
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• PeopleFund• South Dallas Fair Park Trust Fund• Southeast Dallas Chamber of Commerce• Southeast Dallas Hispanic Chamber of Commerce• Southern Dallas Development Corporation• Startup Weekend Dallas• Stemmons Corridor Business Association• Tarrant Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• The Center for Government Contracting SBDC• The Institute for Innovation & Entrepreneurship at UT Dallas• The Murphy Center for Entrepreneurship• Trinity Valley Small Business Development Center (SBDC)• Tyler Small Business Development Center (SBDC)
• U.S. Small Business Administration (Business Opportunities Team)• U.S. Small Business Administration (Funding Relations Team)• University of Texas at Dallas - Technology Commercialization• UNT Discovery Park• West Dallas Chamber of Commerce• Dallas Economic Development• Dallas Sustainable Development & Construction• Dallas Code Compliance• Dallas Community Prosecutors• DPL Sammons Small Business Center• Internal Revenue Service• Texas Comptroller• DCAD
APPENDIX C: EXAMPLE DALLAS B.R.A.I.N. EVENTS TO DATE
Over 1,200 participants in office hours, workshops and events:
• Access to capital• Crowdfunding• How to write a business plan• Social media marketing for
small business• Local entrepreneurs tell their
real world experiences• Small business resources for
veterans• Location analysis using
ReferenceUSA• Starting a food business
• Getting started with podcasting for small business
• Patents, trademarks and copyright
• Technology for business one-on-one sessions
• Estimating project costs• Procurement training • Etsy Craft Entrepreneurship • Dallas NewTech• Dallas B.R.A.I.N. office hours
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